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Resurrection man or resurrection men may refer to: A term for a body snatcher—a person who secretly exhumes dead bodies to sell them; Resurrection Man, the antagonist of the serial novel The Mysteries of London; Resurrection Man, a 1994 novel by Eoin McNamee. Resurrection Man, a 1998 film adaptation directed by Marc Evans
Resurrection Man is a 1998 Irish extreme horror period drama film, set specifically in Northern Ireland, directed by Marc Evans with a screenplay written by Eoin McNamee based on his novel of the same name.
The first volume of Resurrection Man was critically acclaimed and earned a dedicated fanbase but did not become a commercial success. The series ended in 1999 after 27 issues, with one issue being numbered Resurrection Man #1 Million (taking place in the 853rd century and tying into the DC One Million crossover). While the series answered many ...
The Body Doubles appear in the relaunched Resurrection Man series. [4] In the new continuity, the two are a romantic couple and, rather than being supervillains, are mercenaries in the employ of an organization that Mitch Shelley (The Resurrection Man) once worked for and which now wants him back to figure out how he returns from the dead.
The title, besides the explanation in the book itself, is a reference to the body-snatchers of the 19th century, who were known as 'resurrectionists' or 'resurrection men'. Rebus himself, in the preceding novel, The Falls, was preoccupied with Burke and Hare who posed as grave-robbers and are often carelessly identified as 'resurrection men.' [2]
Likewise, the Kindred of the East supplement gave a structure of the Wheel of Ages (mirrored in First Edition books as the Ages of Man) that seemed to accommodate the integration of Exalted and the classic World of Darkness, the former the First and Second Age, and the latter being the Fifth Age.
Resurrection Man (London, Picador, 1994) - detailed the bloodletting of the Ulster Volunteer Force gang, the Shankill Butchers; The Blue Tango (London, Faber & Faber, 2001) - examined the murder of Lancelot Curran's 19-year-old daughter, Patricia Curran; nominated for Booker; The Ultras (Faber & Faber, 2004) - about the killing of Robert Nairac
The game's single player campaign follows a dead man in Purgatory who is offered a deal to defeat the invading forces of Lucifer's army in exchange for being allowed to enter Heaven. The game was particularly well-received for its multiplayer experience and was featured for two seasons on the Cyberathlete Professional League's World Tour.